Title: Administration and Scoring of READINGMAZE RMAZE for Use in General Outcome Measurement
1(No Transcript)
2Administration and Scoring of READING-MAZE
(R-MAZE) for Use in General Outcome Measurement
- Power Point Authored by
- Jillyan Kennedy
- Based on Administration and Scoring of Reading
R-MAZE for Use - with AIMSweb Training Workbook
- By
- Michelle M. Shinn, Ph.D.
- Mark R. Shinn, Ph.D
3Overview of the CBM R-MAZE Assessment Training
Session
- The Purpose is to provide background
information, data collection procedures, and
practice opportunities to administer and
scoreReading MAZE.
- Designed to accompany
- Administration and Scoring of Reading R-MAZE
for Use in General Outcome Measurement
Training Workbook - Standard R-MAZE Reading Passages
- AIMSweb Web-based Software
- Embedded QuickTime Examples, DVD or VHS
Training Video
4Training Session Goals
- Brief review of Curriculum Based Measurement
(CBM) and General Outcome Measurement (GOM). - Its Purpose
- Its Origin
- Learn how to administer and score CBM R-MAZE
through applied practice.
5General Outcome Measurements from Other Fields
- Medicine measures height, weight, temperature,
and/or blood pressure. - Federal Reserve Board measures the Consumer
Price Index. - Wall Street measures the Dow-Jones Industrial
Average. - Companies report earnings per share.
- McDonalds measures how many hamburgers they
sell.
6Common Characteristics of General Outcome
Measures (GOMS)
- Simple, accurate, and reasonably inexpensive in
terms of time and materials. - Considered so important to doing business well
that they are routine. - Are collected on an ongoing and frequent basis.
- Shape/inform a variety of important decisions.
7Origins of CBM as General Outcome Measures
Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM) was developed
more than 20 years ago by Stanley Deno at the
University of Minnesota through a federal
contract to develop a reliable and valid
measurement system for evaluating basic skills
growth. CBM is supported by more than 20 years
of school-based research by the US Department of
Education. Supporting documentation can be found
in more than 150 articles, book chapters, and
books in the professional literature describing
the use of CBM to make a variety of important
educational decisions.
8CBM is Designed to Provide Educators With
- The same kind of evaluation technology as other
professions!
- Powerful measures that are
- Simple
- Accurate
- Efficient indicators of student achievement
that guide/inform a variety of decisions
9R-MAZE is Used for Scientific Reasons Based on
Evidence
- It is a reliable and valid indicator of student
achievement. - It is simple, efficient, and of short duration
to facilitate frequent administration by
teachers. - It provides assessment information that helps
teachers plan better instruction. - It is sensitive to the improvement of students
achievement over time. - It is easily understood by teachers and
parents. - Improves achievement when used to monitor
progress.
10Curriculum Based Measurement Reading R-MAZE
CBM R-MAZE is designed to provide educators a
more complete picture of students reading
skills, especially when comprehension problems
are suspected.
11Curriculum Based Measurement Reading R-MAZE
(Continued)
- R-MAZE is a multiple-choice cloze task that
students complete while reading silently. - The students are presented with 150-400 word
passages. - The first sentence is left intact.
- After the first sentence, every 7th word is
replaced with three word choices inside a
parenthesis. - The three choices consist of
- Near Distracter
- Exact Match
- Far Distracter
12Sample Grade 4 R-MAZE Passage
13Examples of R-MAZE
R-MAZE Workbook Page 9
14Observation Questions
- What did you observe about Emmas and Abbys
R-MAZE performances? - What other conclusions can you draw?
15Things to Always Remember About CBM R-MAZE
- Are designed to serve as indicators of
general reading achievement. - Are standardized tests to be given, scored,
and interpreted in a standard way. - Are researched with respect to psychometric
properties to ensure accurate measures of
learning.
16Things to Always Remember About CBM R-MAZE
(Continued)
- Are sensitive to improvement in Short
Periods of time. - Designed to be as short as possible to
ensure its do ability. - Are linked to decision making for promoting
positive achievement and Problem-Solving.
17Administration and Scoring of CBM R-MAZE
- What examiners need to do . . .
- Before testing students
- While testing students
- After testing students
18Items Students Need Before Testing
- What the students need for testing
- CBM R-MAZE practice test
- Appropriate CBM R-MAZE passages
- Pencils
19Items Administrators Need Before Testing
- What the tester uses for testing
- Stopwatch
- Appropriate CBM R-MAZE answer key
- Appropriate standardized directions
- List of students to be tested.
20Additional Assessment Aids
- A List of students to be tested
- Stopwatch (requireddigital preferred)
21Setting up Assessment Environment
Assessment environments are flexible and could
include
- The classroom if assessing the entire class.
- A cluster of desks or small tables in the
classroom for small group assessment. - Individual desks or stations for individual
assessment.
22Things You Need to do While Testing
Follow the standardized directions
- Attach a cover sheet that includes the practice
test so that students do not begin the test
right away. - Do a simple practice test with younger
students. - Monitor to ensure students are circling answers
instead of writing them. - Be prepared to Prorate for students who may
finish early. - Try to avoid answering student questions.
- Adhere to the end of timing.
23CBM R-MAZE Standard Directions
- Pass R-MAZE tasks out to students. Have students
write their names on the cover sheet, so they do
not start early. Make sure they do not turn the
page until you tell them to. - Say this to the student (s)
- When I say Begin I want you to silently read a
story. You will have 3 minutes to read the story
and complete the task. Listen carefully to the
directions. Some of the words in the story are
replaced with a group of 3 words. Your job is to
circle the 1 word that makes the most sense in
the story. Only 1 word is correct. - Decide if a practice test is needed. Say . . .
- Lets practice one together. Look at your first
page. Read the first sentence silently while I
read it out loud The dog, apple, broke, ran
after the cat. The three choices are apple,
broke, ran. The dog apple after the cat. That
sentence does not make sense. The dog broke
after the cat. That sentence does not make
sense. The dog ran after the cat. That
sentence does make sense, so circle the word ran.
(Make sure the students circle the word ran.)
24CBM R-MAZE Standard Directions (Continued)
Lets go to the next sentence. Read it
silently while I read it out loud. The
cat ran fast, green, for up the hill. The three
choices are fast, green, for up the
hill. Which word is the correct word
for the sentence? (The students answer
fast) Yes, The cat ran fast up the
hill is correct, so circle the correct
word fast. (Make sure students circle fast)
Silently read the next sentence and raise
your hand when you think you know the
answer. (Make sure students know the correct
word. Read the sentence with the correct
answer) Thats right. The dog barked
at the cat is correct. Now what do
you do when you choose the correct
word? (Students answer Circle it.
Make sure the students understand the task)
Thats correct, you circle it. I think youre
ready to work on a story on your own.
25CBM R-MAZE Standard Directions (Continued)
- Start the testing by saying . . .
- When I say Begin turn to the first story and
start reading silently. When you come to a group
of three words, circle the 1 word that makes the
most sense. Work as quickly as you can without
making mistakes. If you finish a/ the page/first
side, turn the page and keep working until I say
Stop or you are all done. Do you have any
questions? - Then say, Begin. Start your stopwatch.
- Monitor students to make sure they understand
that they are to circle only 1 word. - If a student finished before the time limit,
collect the students R-MAZE task and record the
time on the students test booklet. - At the end of 3 minutes say Stop. Put your
pencils down. Please close your booklet. - Collect the R-MAZE tasks.
-
26CBM R-MAZE Familiar Directions
- After the students have put their names on the
cover sheer, start the testing by saying . . . - When I say Begin turn to the first story and
start reading silently. When you come to a group
of three words, circle the 1 word that makes the
most sense. Work as quickly as you can without
making mistakes. If you finish a/ the page/first
side, turn the page and keep working until I say
Stop or you are all done. Do you have any
questions? - Then say, Begin. Start your stopwatch.
- Monitor students to make sure they understand
that they are to circle only 1 word. - If a student finished before the time limit,
collect the students R-MAZE task and record the
time on the students test booklet. - At the end of 3 minutes say Stop. Put your
pencils down. Please close your booklet. - Collect the R-MAZE tasks.
-
27Things to Do After Testing
- Score immediately to ensure accurate results!
- Determine the number of words (items) correct.
- Use the answer key and put a slash (/) through
incorrect words.
28CBM R-MAZE Scoring
What is correct? The students circles the word
that matches the correct word on the scoring
template.
- What is incorrect?
- An answer is considered an error if the student
- Circles an incorrect word
- Omits word selections other than those the
student - was unable to complete before the 3 minutes
- expired
29Making Scoring Efficient
- Count the total number of items up to the last
circled word. - Compare the student answers to the correct
answers on the scoring template. Mark a slash
/ through incorrect responses. - Subtract the number of incorrect answers from the
total number of items attempted. - Record the total number of correct answers on the
cover sheet followed by the total number of
errors (e.g., 35/2).
30CBM R-MAZE Prorating
If a student finishes all the items before 3
minutes, the score may be prorated.
- When the student finished, the time must be
recorded and the number of correct answers
counted. For example, the student may have
finished in 2 minutes and correctly answered 40
items. - Convert the time taken in seconds. (2 minutes
120 seconds) - Divide the number of seconds by the number
correct. (120/40 3) - Calculate the number of seconds in the full 3
minutes. (3 minutes 180 seconds) - Divide the number of full seconds by the
calculated value from step 3. (180/3 60)
31Summary
- You now have the building blocks to begin CBM
R-MAZE to ensure literacy growth.
- Practice to automaticity --Youll become more
efficient - Check IRR using the AIRS for accuracy/efficiency
with a colleague - Stay in tune by periodically checking AIRS
32Practice Exercise 1 Lets Score
R-CBM Workbook Page 17
33Practice Exercise 2 Lets Score
34R-CBM Workbook Page 19
35